Reconsidering Racism
This is one of the more sensical things I think I've heard come out of Hollywood in the recent (or distant) past, stated by Morgan Freeman:
Actor Morgan Freeman has a solution to the problem of racism – "Stop talking about it!"
In a CBS News' 60 Minutes profile of the Oscar-winning actor scheduled to air tonight, Freeman tells Mike Wallace labels like "white" and "black" are an obstacle to defeating racism.
"I am going to stop calling you a white man and I'm going to ask you to stop calling me a black man," he says. "I know you as Mike Wallace. You know me as Morgan Freeman. You wouldn't say, 'Well, I know this white guy named Mike Wallace.' You know what I'm saying?"
The actor also criticizes Black History Month, saying setting aside a special month actually segregates black history from American history.
Calling the idea "ridiculous," Freeman notes there's no "white history month."
"You're going to relegate my history to a month?" Freeman asks Wallace. "I don't want a black history month. Black history is American history," he says.








1 Comments:
Kudos to Freeman for taking the moral high road in this very old debate. The most successful members of any particular grouping of people are those who do not cling to excuses. The neighborhood in which I live is populated with (so as I can tell) every ethnicity represented in the greater Richmond area - including plenty of Blacks. The common themes to each of these homes seems to be at least twofold: 1, they are solid nuclear-type families and 2, at least one adult (almost always the male) is successful in his career.
Successful people from any ethnicity / group like to live around one another.
Can it be argued that unsuccessful people also prefer to live around one another? I think so. Of course, some cannot live around successful people easily - for they cannot afford to do so. Simple thesis therein. But I do think a real argument can be made that misery does love company.
Kudos to those who love neither misery nor its company.
Post a Comment
<< Home